The World Cup only comes around every four years. Most players get three or four shots at it across a career, if they’re lucky. Some get fewer. So scoring 10, 12, or 15 goals across that limited window is not just remarkable — it requires a specific kind of player who shows up at the biggest moment, again and again, across a decade or more of international football.
The record has been broken just three times in the tournament’s entire history. A Brazilian held it for years. A German took it from him. And the man who eventually broke both of them did it in Brazil, on the world’s biggest stage, against the host nation in a semifinal — with a header that made him the sole record holder at 16 goals across four tournaments.
That record has stood since 2014. It is under serious threat for the first time this summer. Two players are currently within striking distance — one of the greatest footballers who ever lived, and a 27-year-old who has already scored more World Cup goals in two appearances than most players manage in a career. The 2026 tournament in the United States, Canada, and Mexico could rewrite this list before July is over.
The full rankings are below — every player with 8 or more World Cup goals, the Golden Boot winners from every tournament, single-tournament records, and the numbers that put it all in context.
Updated June 2026
Most World Cup Goals Ever: All-Time Top Scorers
All-time rankings, single-tournament records, Golden Boot history, active player totals, and the 2026 race to break Klose’s record.
All-time World Cup top scorers
Minimum 10 goals. Active player totals as of start of 2026 tournament.
| # |
Player |
Nation |
Goals |
Games |
Tournaments |
Years |
Status |
Context |
| 1 |
Miroslav Klose |
Germany |
16 |
24 |
4 |
2002, 2006, 2010, 2014 |
Retired |
Set the record in 2014 against Algeria. Won the Golden Boot in 2006. Only player to score 5 goals in four consecutive tournaments. |
| 2 |
Ronaldo |
Brazil |
15 |
19 |
4 |
1998, 2002, 2006, 2010 |
Retired |
Won the Golden Boot in 2002 with 8 goals. Won the World Cup twice. Held the record before Klose surpassed him in 2014. |
| 3 |
Gerd Muller |
W. Germany |
14 |
13 |
2 |
1970, 1974 |
Deceased |
The most efficient scorer on this list — 14 goals in just 13 games. Won the Golden Boot in 1970 and the World Cup in 1974. |
| 4 |
Just Fontaine |
France |
13 |
6 |
1 |
1958 |
Deceased |
Single-tournament record All 13 goals came in one tournament. Played in borrowed boots. The record has stood 68 years. |
| 4 |
Lionel Messi |
Argentina |
13 |
26 |
5 |
2006–2022 |
Active 2026 |
Won the World Cup in 2022. Three goals from Klose’s record entering 2026 at age 38. His final tournament. |
| 6 |
Pelé |
Brazil |
12 |
14 |
4 |
1958–1970 |
Deceased |
Won three World Cups. Youngest player ever to score in a World Cup final (17, in 1958). Never won the Golden Boot. |
| 6 |
Kylian Mbappe |
France |
12 |
14 |
2 |
2018, 2022 |
Active 2026 |
12 goals in just two tournaments at age 27. Won the Golden Boot in 2022 with 8 goals. The most realistic threat to Klose’s record. |
| 8 |
Sandor Kocsis |
Hungary |
11 |
5 |
1 |
1954 |
Deceased |
11 goals at the 1954 World Cup alone. Won the Golden Boot. Hungary were runners-up. |
| 8 |
Jurgen Klinsmann |
Germany |
11 |
17 |
4 |
1990–1998 |
Retired |
Spread his 11 goals across four tournaments. Won the World Cup in 1990. Later coached Germany and the USA. |
| 10 |
Helmut Rahn |
W. Germany |
10 |
10 |
2 |
1954, 1958 |
Deceased |
Scored the winner in the 1954 World Cup final — one of the most famous goals in the tournament’s history. |
| 10 |
Gary Lineker |
England |
10 |
12 |
2 |
1986, 1990 |
Retired |
Won the Golden Boot in 1986 with 6 goals. Never won the World Cup. Now one of England’s most recognizable broadcasters. |
| 10 |
Gabriel Batistuta |
Argentina |
10 |
12 |
3 |
1994, 1998, 2002 |
Retired |
One of the most feared strikers of the 1990s. Scored in three separate World Cups. |
| 10 |
Teofilo Cubillas |
Peru |
10 |
13 |
2 |
1970, 1978 |
Retired |
10 goals across two World Cups from a nation rarely mentioned in the conversation. One of South America’s most underrated legends. |
| 10 |
Thomas Muller |
Germany |
10 |
16 |
3 |
2010, 2014, 2018 |
Retired |
Won the Golden Boot in 2010 as a 20-year-old. Three World Cup tournaments with Germany. Won the title in 2014. |
| 10 |
Grzegorz Lato |
Poland |
10 |
20 |
3 |
1974, 1978, 1982 |
Retired |
Won the Golden Boot in 1974 when Poland finished third. 10 goals across 20 matches and three tournaments. |
The 2026 race: Messi (13 goals) needs 4 to tie Klose, 5 to break the record. Mbappe (12 goals) needs 5 to tie, 6 to break it. Both are playing in the 2026 tournament. The record has stood since 2014.
Notable scorers: 6 to 9 goals
Players just outside the top tier and active stars building their tallies
| Player |
Nation |
Goals |
Games |
Tournaments |
Years |
Notes |
| Eusebio |
Portugal |
9 |
6 |
1 |
1966 |
Won the Golden Boot at the 1966 World Cup with 9 goals. Portugal finished third. Widely regarded as one of the greatest players never to win the tournament. |
| Christian Vieri |
Italy |
9 |
9 |
3 |
1994–2002 |
Consistent scorer across three tournaments for Italy. Nine goals from a nation known for defensive football. |
| Roberto Fontaine |
France |
9 |
13 |
3 |
1978–1986 |
Not to be confused with Just Fontaine. Scored 9 goals across three tournaments as part of a strong French generation. |
| Ronaldo (CR7) |
Portugal |
8 |
22 |
5 |
2006–2022 |
Despite five tournaments and 22 appearances, Cristiano Ronaldo managed only 8 World Cup goals — a surprising figure for a player of his stature. |
| Harry Kane |
England |
6+ |
9 |
2 |
2018, 2022 |
Active 2026 Won the Golden Boot in 2018 with 6 goals. Scored 3 in 2022. Entering 2026 with England. |
| Kylian Mbappe |
France |
12 |
14 |
2 |
2018, 2022 |
Already listed in top 10 — included here for context on pace. More WC goals at 27 than Ronaldo scored in his entire career. |
Golden Boot winners: every tournament
Top scorer at each World Cup from 1930 to 2022
| Year / Host |
Golden Boot Winner |
Goals |
Nation |
| 1930 Uruguay |
Guillermo Stabile |
8 |
Argentina |
| 1934 Italy |
Oldrich Nejedly |
5 |
Czechoslovakia |
| 1938 France |
Leonidas da Silva |
7 |
Brazil |
| 1950 Brazil |
Ademir de Menezes |
8 |
Brazil |
| 1954 Switzerland |
Sandor Kocsis |
11 |
Hungary |
| 1958 Sweden |
Just Fontaine |
13 |
France |
| 1962 Chile |
Garrincha / Vava / others |
4 |
Multiple |
| 1966 England |
Eusebio |
9 |
Portugal |
| 1970 Mexico |
Gerd Muller |
10 |
West Germany |
| 1974 West Germany |
Grzegorz Lato |
7 |
Poland |
| 1978 Argentina |
Mario Kempes |
6 |
Argentina |
| 1982 Spain |
Paolo Rossi |
6 |
Italy |
| 1986 Mexico |
Gary Lineker |
6 |
England |
| 1990 Italy |
Salvatore Schillaci |
6 |
Italy |
| 1994 USA |
Hristo Stoichkov / Oleg Salenko |
6 |
Bulgaria / Russia |
| 1998 France |
Davor Suker |
6 |
Croatia |
| 2002 Japan/Korea |
Ronaldo |
8 |
Brazil |
| 2006 Germany |
Miroslav Klose |
5 |
Germany |
| 2010 South Africa |
Thomas Muller |
5 |
Germany |
| 2014 Brazil |
James Rodriguez |
6 |
Colombia |
| 2018 Russia |
Harry Kane |
6 |
England |
| 2022 Qatar |
Kylian Mbappe |
8 |
France |
World Cup goalscoring records
Individual and team marks that define the tournament’s history
| Record |
Holder |
Context |
| All-time goals record |
Miroslav Klose — 16 |
Set in 2014; has stood for 12 years; Germany won that tournament |
| Most goals, single tournament |
Just Fontaine — 13 (1958) |
In 6 games with France. Unmatched for 68 years and counting. |
| Most goals, one game |
Oleg Salenko — 5 (1994) |
Russia vs. Cameroon, 1994. Russia still lost in the group stage. |
| Youngest scorer ever |
Pele — 17 years, 239 days |
1958 World Cup vs. Wales in the quarterfinal. Also the youngest to score in a final. |
| Oldest scorer ever |
Roger Milla — 42 years, 39 days |
1994 World Cup vs. Russia. Cameroon were already eliminated. |
| Most goals, single player in finals |
Vava and others — 2 |
Multiple players have scored twice in a World Cup final; Mbappe did it in 2022 |
| First World Cup goal ever |
Lucien Laurent (France) — 1930 |
Scored in the 19th minute against Mexico on July 13, 1930. |
| Most WC goals without winning |
Ronaldo (CR7) — 8 |
Five tournaments, 8 goals, zero World Cup titles despite being one of the sport’s greatest players |
| Most goals, active player (2026) |
Lionel Messi — 13 |
Entering the 2026 tournament as the all-time leader among active players |
| Fastest to 12 goals |
Kylian Mbappe — 2 tournaments |
Only Ronaldo (Brazil) matched this pace in the modern era |
| Nations with most all-time WC goals |
Germany — 226 |
Germany leads all nations in total World Cup goals scored across all tournaments |
Top scoring nations all-time
The countries that have found the net most across World Cup history
| Nation |
Goals |
Tournaments |
Notes |
| Germany / West Germany |
226 |
16 tournaments |
Three players in the all-time top 8. Most consistent scoring nation in World Cup history. |
| Brazil |
229 |
22 tournaments |
Most goals all-time and most World Cup appearances. Five-time champions. |
| France |
120+ |
16 tournaments |
Two-time champions; Mbappe drives the modern total upward rapidly. |
| Argentina |
145 |
18 tournaments |
Two-time champions now; Messi’s career totals shaped this number significantly. |
| Hungary |
87 |
9 tournaments |
Dominated the 1950s without ever winning; Kocsis’s 11-goal tournament a centerpiece. |
Sources: FIFA official records, Opta Analyst, ESPN. Active player totals correct at start of 2026 tournament. 2026 goals will be added upon completion. — Legion Report
Why Germany and Brazil own this list
Scan the all-time rankings and two nations stand out above everyone else. Germany has three players in the top eight. Brazil has two. That is not a coincidence — it reflects which nations have been consistently competitive deep into tournaments across the longest stretch of World Cup history. You cannot score 14 or 15 or 16 goals if your team keeps getting knocked out in the group stage. The all-time scorers are almost all products of great teams, not just great individual players.
The outlier is Just Fontaine, who sits fourth all-time despite playing in only one World Cup. France in 1958 was a remarkable team that ran through the tournament almost without interruption, and Fontaine — playing with borrowed boots after his own pair split — scored 13 goals in six games. Nobody has come within four goals of that single-tournament record in 68 years.
The 2026 race
For the first time since Klose broke the record in 2014, two players arrive at a World Cup with a genuine shot at 16. Messi enters at 13 goals in five tournaments. Mbappe enters at 12 in just two. Messi at 38 is the older story — a player chasing history in what will almost certainly be his final World Cup. Mbappe at 27 is the longer one — he could realistically be chasing this record in 2030 as well if he falls short this summer.
Either way, the list below is about to get more interesting.
— Legion Report